Hammy McMillan, from Stranraer, was a world champion in 1999 - a title Murdoch has also won twice.

In the women's game, Lockerbie's Carolyn Hutchison skipped a rink to the Scottish title in 1997.

Stranraer's Gail Munro repeated that feat in 2008.

History

The RCCC says early evidence of the sport is scarce but a first reference is thought to have come in 1541 when notary John McQuhin recorded a challenge about "throwing stones across the ice" between a monk at Paisley Abbey and a relative of the abbot.

"From then on we find references to the game with increasing frequency, and it is possible to say that by the end of the 18th Century curling was played throughout the Lowlands of Scotland," it added.

"Poets of Kirkcudbrightshire, Renfrewshire and Lanarkshire celebrated the game in published poems."

Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
There is said to be no evidence Robert Burns played the game but he certainly knew of its existence

The RCCC concluded that although there was "no evidence" that Scotland's most famous poet, Robert Burns, played the game - he certainly knew of it.

It cites lines of Tam Samson's Elegy as proof of that fact with its reference:

"When Winter muffles up his cloak,

And binds the mire like a rock;

When to the loughs the curlers flock,

Wi' gleesome speed."

Burns was born in Ayrshire but spent the last years of his life in Dumfries and Galloway.

Weather

Although far from the coldest part of the country, southern Scotland enjoyed good conditions for what was, at first, an outdoor sport.

Originally curlers played on either natural lochs or specially-constructed ponds.

However, some seasons went barren, as ice never formed.

Image copyrightDavid BairdImage caption
Curling started life as an outdoor sport and some matches are still played on ponds or lochs

The Grand Caledonian Curling Club was instituted in 1838 and four years later it obtained the necessary patronage to become the Royal Caledonian Curling Club.

"From 1838 onwards the game exploded in popularity until by the last decades of the 19th Century every county had at least one club affiliated with the Royal Club, and almost every parish in the land had its custom-made curling pond," said the RCCC.

One of the big attractions was the institution of so-called Grand Matches between the north and south of Scotland.

Dedication

The sport is easy to pick up but devilishly hard to master.

It takes years of practise to achieve the apparently effortless ability to send a stone smoothly across the ice to a small target some distance away.

Even those who don't make Olympic champions go to great lengths to show their love of the sport.

Image copyrightDumfries Ice Bowl Curling AssociationImage caption
Curlers from southern Scotland reclaimed their world record for the longest match last year